Date: 20200204
Docket: T-2201-18
Citation: 2020 FC 189
Ottawa, Ontario, February 4, 2020
PRESENT: Mr. Justice James W. O'Reilly
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BETWEEN:
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X
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The applicant is an experienced executive in the public service. In 2017, a number of subordinate employees made a complaint against her through their union. In 2018, an employee made a formal complaint under Part XX of the Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations, SOR/86-304 (all enactments cited are set out in an Annex). Part XX of the Regulations is entitled “Violence Prevention in the Work Place”
.
[2]
In response to the complaints, a Director General began an informal investigation under s 20.9(2) of the Regulations in an attempt “to resolve the matter with the employee as soon as feasible”
. The DG recommended that the applicant agree to an informal resolution of the complaints by acknowledging them, apologizing, and committing to make changes in the future. The applicant declined. Accordingly, the DG appointed an independent “competent person”
[CP] to conduct an investigation under subsection 20.9(3) of the Regulations.
[3]
The CP interviewed 11 current and former employees. They described the applicant’s conduct in the workplace as including threats, intimidation, and interference. Only three of the employees interviewed permitted their identities to be disclosed to the applicant.
[4]
The DG invited the applicant to participate in the investigation by agreeing to be interviewed by the CP. In response, the applicant requested particulars of the complaints against her. The DG initially declined to provide further disclosure. After discussions among the DG, the CP, and the applicant, further particulars were given to the applicant in September 2018.
[5]
Even though the applicant had not yet agreed to be interviewed, the CP delivered a report of her investigation in November 2018. The CP’s report concluded that the applicant had exposed employees to various kinds of psychological violence. She conceded that the applicant might have been able to explain many of her actions, had the applicant been interviewed. However, the CP felt the evidence she had gathered without the applicant’s participation supported her conclusions. In her report, she recommended disciplining the applicant, removing her from a managerial role, and providing her with training, counselling, and monitoring.
[6]
The applicant seeks judicial review of the report. She asks me to set aside the report for a lack of procedural fairness because it was prepared without any meaningful input from her or witnesses she might have provided, and because the CP and DG did not provide her sufficient particulars. She also submits that the report was unreasonable.
[7]
I cannot quash the report. It merely sets out recommendations for the applicant’s employer. It is not a decision that is amenable to judicial review. This application is therefore premature. Given that conclusion, it is unnecessary for me to address the applicant’s arguments relating to the unfairness and unreasonableness of the report. The sole issue is whether this application is premature.
II.
Is this application for judicial review premature?
[8]
The applicant argues that the report represents a final conclusion on the issue of workplace violence and that this Court is the proper forum in which to challenge the report’s findings. The applicant says she has no other real alternative remedy.
[9]
I disagree.
[10]
The CP’s report is part of an ongoing process which has not yet concluded. A few months after the report was completed and shared with the applicant, the parties — the applicant, her legal counsel, and her employer — met to discuss it. At that point, the applicant had not provided a written response to the report. In February 2019, she was asked again for a written response, or to agree to be interviewed by the CP. The applicant provided a response in March 2019.
[11]
In April 2019, the employer prepared its own report based on the CP’s conclusions and the applicant’s response. The employer met with the applicant in June 2019 to discuss the employer’s report.
[12]
To date, the employer has not taken any administrative action against the applicant in response to the CP’s report. The applicant states that she has experienced adverse consequences related to the report: removal to another position, a poor performance appraisal, and forced training and coaching sessions. However, those consequences did not flow from the report; they flowed from the underlying complaints. Indeed, these consequences predate the report, and the applicant had remedies available to grieve them. Setting aside the report on judicial review would have no impact on the adverse consequences that the applicant experienced.
[13]
I also note that the CP’s report was prepared within a regulatory regime aimed at preventing workplace violence, not disciplining those who may be responsible for it. Additionally, this regime compels an employer to implement measures to prevent recurrence of any instances of workplace violence after it receives an investigatory report containing conclusions and recommendations. Therefore, decision-making authority under the scheme falls to employers. Persons affected by those decisions may seek to set them aside by way of judicial review. This regulatory arrangement reinforces my conclusion that the applicant’s application for judicial review of the CP’s report is premature.
III.
Conclusion and Disposition
[14]
As the applicant’s application for judicial review is premature, I must dismiss it with costs.
JUDGMENT IN T-2201-18
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review is dismissed, with costs.
"James W. O'Reilly"
Judge
Annex
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FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET:
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T-2201-18
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STYLE OF CAUSE:
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X v ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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PLACE OF HEARING:
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Ottawa, Ontario
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DATE OF HEARING:
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November 18, 2019
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS:
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O’REILLY J.
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DATED:
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February 4, 2020
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APPEARANCES:
Janice B. Payne
Dana Du Perron
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For The Applicant
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Joel Stelpstra
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For The Respondent
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Nelligan, O’Brien, Payne LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
Ottawa, Ontario
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For The Applicant
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Deputy Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa, Ontario
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For The Respondent
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